Database of Servitude and Emancipation Records (1722–1863)


This database includes approximately 3,400 names found in governmental records involving the servitude and emancipation of Africans and, occasionally, Indians in the French and English eras of colonial Illinois (1722–1790) and African-Americans in the American period of Illinois (1790–1863). The Archives extracted the names of servants, slaves, or free persons and masters, witnesses, or related parties from selected governmental records to produce this database. After searching the database, researchers can see an abstract of the record by clicking the record number of the appropriate entry. Currently the following records are included in this database:
Bond County
Board of Supervisors' Minutes, 1817
 
Edwards County
Servitude and Emancipation Record, 1815–1860
 
Gallatin County
Servitude Register, 1815–1839
 
Madison County
Servitude and Emancipation Register, 1805–1826
Emancipation Registers, 1830–1860
 
Massac County
Emancipation Register, 1849–1855
 
Pope County
Servitude Register, 1816–1819
 
Randolph County
Record Book 1, 1736–1782
Deed Record J-M, 1797–1815
Servitude and Emancipation Registers, 1809–1863
Kaskaskia Manuscripts, 1714–1816
 
St. Clair County
Registre of Insinuations, 1737–1769
Record of Auction of Charleville Estate, 1782
Deed Record A-C, 1790-1796, 1800–1813
Servitude Register, 1805-1832, 1846–1863
Slave Registration Files, 1807–1849
Emancipation Register, 1812–1843
 
Union County
Emancipation Register, 1835–1844
 
U.S. General Land Office, Kaskaskia District
Board of Commissioners Transcripts of Documents Collected, 1722–1814
 
Publications
Alvord, Clarence Walworth, ed. Cahokia Records, 1778–1790. Springfield: Illinois State Historical Library, 1907.
Norton, Margaret Cross, ed. Illinois Census Returns, 1810,1818. Springfield: Illinois State Historical Library, 1935.
_____, ed. Illinois Census Returns, 1820. Springfield: Illinois State Historical Library, 1934.

Document Type

The following list provides brief descriptions of the kinds of documents involving servitude and emancipation found in the records listed above:

  • Bill of Sale
    Bills of sale record the sale, trade, or transfer of Negro and Indian slaves through private sales and public auctions.
     
  • Birth
    Although birth records were not usually kept for slaves or indentured servants, the recording of birth information was sometimes coincidental with the creation of other types of records.
     
  • Census
    Information is included from the Illinois censuses for 1810, 1818, and 1820 for slaves and free persons of color.
     
  • Divorce
    This divorce settlement grants female slave, Hannah, to the wife.
     
  • Donation
    During the French colonial period in Illinois, notaries recorded donations or gifts of property and chattels, given upon marriage or certain other occasions, often with legal conditions attached.
     
  • Emancipation
    Emancipation records include both manumissions and evidences or affidavits of freedom.
     
  • Estate
    Records of the settlement of estates often involved the sale or disposition of slaves or servants.
     
  • Guardianship
    These records involve the appointment of a guardian for minors.
     
  • Indenture
    Indentures record agreements between masters and servants for periods from 1 to 99 years.
     
  • Inventory
    The inventories of the estates of deceased French slaveholders often listed the slaves belonging to the deceased.
     
  • Lease
    French slaveholders sometimes leased the services of their slaves at public auction or by private contract.
     
  • Marriage
    Slaves occasionally appeared in French marriage contracts. A few marriages were recorded for Negroes in the records indexed for this database.
     
  • Mortgage
    French slaveholders occasionally mortgaged slaves.
     
  • Other
    Records falling into this miscellaneous category include financial items, such as receipts, contracts, agreements, and debts; records of runaway slaves; and court records concerning slaves charged with various crimes.
     
  • Registration
    Beginning in 1805, persons transporting Negroes or mulattoes into the Indiana Territory were required to register them with the clerk of the court of Common Pleas. In 1809 the Illinois Territory, created from the western portion of the Indiana Territory, adopted Indiana territorial law.
     
  • Will
    Slaves and free Negroes were mentioned occasionally in wills.

Photocopies

For an unofficial and uncertified copy of the original or published record, please provide the following information: name of county; servant or slave, and other party; date of entry; and file, volume and/or page number of record. Many of the documents, especially for the colonial period, fail to give any name or only provide a given name for the slave or servant. For those documents lacking the slave's or servant's name, the researcher can locate an entry if the name of the owner, witness or related party is known. As a result of limitations on staff research time, the Archives can do no more than two name searches per request. If you would like an unofficial and uncertified copy of the record, please include your mailing address. Send your request to:

Illinois State Archives
Reference Unit
Margaret Cross Norton Building
Capitol Complex
Springfield, Illinois 62756
 

Telephone: (217) 782-3556
Fax: (217) 524-3930
Submit a Request Via the Internet


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